JudicialTyranny
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2005
- Messages
- 746
I'll throw my 2 cents in. I am no expert at photography or video, although I am very proficient at technology (I have my own software company).
I just bought a camcorder for my wife, and I got her a MiniDVD (Sony). Why? It was simple to use and easy to play back the videos (on the computer or on the TV in the DVD player) - all easy for her to understand, since she is somewhat technophobic.
We had an older 8mm camcorder, and if that broke, the only way we could play back the 8mm tapes would be to get another 8mm camera or hook the VCR back up and get one of those cartridges that let you put the 8mm tapes in. I'd be facing the same thing with the MiniDV, unless we transferred the MiniDV tapes to the computer. And with 4 kids, sports, work, etc. we don't have time to do that frankly - I can't even get her to empty her digital camera memory card to the computer to write out to CD. So I could see the MiniDV tapes never getting converted to DVD.
So having it record directly onto a DVD, with the DVD media being common and usable in more sources for at least the next several years, made it the most attractive option for us.
I know you can all come up with suggestions around my reasoning, but the deal is done and we have the MiniDVD camera and we are happy with it. Taking the DVD out of the camera, putting it into a case, and knowing that we could put it into the computer or DVD player and watch it without any other effort was the most attractive thing.
I just bought a camcorder for my wife, and I got her a MiniDVD (Sony). Why? It was simple to use and easy to play back the videos (on the computer or on the TV in the DVD player) - all easy for her to understand, since she is somewhat technophobic.
We had an older 8mm camcorder, and if that broke, the only way we could play back the 8mm tapes would be to get another 8mm camera or hook the VCR back up and get one of those cartridges that let you put the 8mm tapes in. I'd be facing the same thing with the MiniDV, unless we transferred the MiniDV tapes to the computer. And with 4 kids, sports, work, etc. we don't have time to do that frankly - I can't even get her to empty her digital camera memory card to the computer to write out to CD. So I could see the MiniDV tapes never getting converted to DVD.
So having it record directly onto a DVD, with the DVD media being common and usable in more sources for at least the next several years, made it the most attractive option for us.
I know you can all come up with suggestions around my reasoning, but the deal is done and we have the MiniDVD camera and we are happy with it. Taking the DVD out of the camera, putting it into a case, and knowing that we could put it into the computer or DVD player and watch it without any other effort was the most attractive thing.


